четверг, 1 марта 2012 г.

NT: Volunteer barmaids keep beer flowing at Larrimah

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NT: Volunteer barmaids keep beer flowing at Larrimah

By Rod McGuirk

LARRIMAH, NT, Dec 17 AAP - Serving beer at an outback pub is a labour of love for AnnKanters and Irene Slater.

The two friends, both aged 55, each volunteer 16 hours a day to run the only hotelin the tiny Northern Territory community of Larrimah.

Fellow members of the local historical society help out behind the bar when they can.

But it is the unpaid efforts of the two women that has kept the Larrimah Wayside Innopen since licensee Dianne Rogers abandoned it in September.

They say their goal is not financial reward. It is to prevent the community of 13 adultslosing their historic pub.

"If you told me three months ago I would be running the pub, I would have said youhad rocks in your head," Ms Kanters, a disabled pensioner, said today.

"It's satisfying work. All you need is a smile on your face and an ear for the customers."

Larrimah is largely a tourist stopover on the Stuart Highway, 535km south of Darwin.

Economic times have been tough, with two caravan parks going into receivership this year.

Ms Kanters said she fell in love with the pub when she and her partner Barry Sharpe,60, decided to move to Larrimah from Dunedoo in central-west NSW eight years ago.

Any profits made are to be ploughed back into the pub, listed by the National Trustas a place of significance, to replace some essential equipment and missing memorabilia.

Ms Rogers had taken over Larrimah's Green Park caravan park and had hoped to take thehotel's liquor licence with her.

If the hotel ceased to trade from 7am until 11pm each day, it could have lost its licence.

The Birdum Historical Society came to the hotel's rescue after the Queensland-basedowners failed to find a new manager to replace Ms Rogers.

The community was already deeply divided between the supporters of Ms Rogers, a formerAlice Springs prison warden whose family dominates the Larrimah Progress Association,and the historical society.

The Larrimah hotel is the last surviving building from the extinct settlement of Birdum,20km south of Larrimah.

Birdum had been the southern railhead of the now defunct North Australia Railway, alsoknown as the Never-Never Line that began nowhere and ended nowhere.

Efforts to build a transcontinental railway from Darwin to Adelaide ran out of steam511 km out of Darwin on the edge of a swamp in 1929 due to a Great Depression money crisis.

Birdum was quickly built around the terminal but the town wound down after World War II.

The prefabricated hotel, built in the early 1930s, was relocated to Larrimah in 1952.

The historical society wants to run a tourist train on the old line from Larrimah toBirdum and maintain the hotel as another historical attraction.

Two months into the stifling wet season when tourists avoid the Top End, Ms Kanterssaid the pub could not afford wages.

"Coming in at the end of the tourist season, we knew that we would have tough times,"

Ms Kanters said.

"But we figured we could work those tough times out and we have so far - we've paidall our bills.

"It's definitely a viable proposition."

The historical society has yet to strike a formal agreement with the pub's owner onthe future management of the business.

Ms Kanters hopes that if the society can build the business up through their volunteerefforts over the next year, the owners will give a consortium of its members an optionto buy it for $120,000.

Profits could then be shared among the consortium and in furthering the society's dreamof reopening the rail to Birdum.

Ms Rogers, whose caravan park is making do with an in-house liquor licence, does notaccept that the pub is being maintained for love.

"They're making money under false pretences," said Ms Rogers, who opposes the tourist rail plan.

"The money's supposed to be going to the Birdum Historical Society but there is nothingat Birdum."

AAP rmg/mg/bwl

KEYWORD: KANTERS (PIX AVAILABLE)

NSW: Two men charged with sex assaults of children

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NSW: Two men charged with sex assaults of children

Two men from the south coast of New South Wales have been charged with child sexual assaults.

Police say a 73-year-old Cambewarra man has been charged with two counts of aggravatedindecent assault.

He was arrested following a search of a Cambewarra property by more than 30 policeyesterday afternoon.

A second Cambewarra man, aged 52, has been charged with four counts of aggravated sexualassault and one count each of aggravated indecent assault and committing an aggravatedact of indecency.

The charges against the second man relate to assaults allegedly committed during the early 1990s.

Both men have been granted conditional bail and will appear at Nowra Local Court in September.

AAP RTV mk/ge d

KEYWORD: ASSAULTS (SYDNEY)

Marriott Chairman Industry Rebound

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HILTON HEAD ISLAND, S.C. (AP) _ The nation's travel industry, hit hard by a sagging economy and terrorist attacks, should be well on the road to recovery by summer, the chairman and chief executive of Marriott International Inc. said Monday.

"There is definitely light at the end of the tunnel and the light is getting brighter," said Bill Marriott, here to rededicate the Hilton Head Marriott Beach and Golf Resort after a $20 million renovation.

"I would think that business travel is the last to come back in this current environment. Business travel we expect to pick up, hopefully by the end of this month, certainly by summer," Marriott said.

His visit to the hotel, the largest on this resort island, coincided with the six-month anniversary of the terror attacks on New York and Washington. Already, Marriott said, the chain is seeing an increase in leisure travel.

Marriott also said the package passed by Congress last week to stimulate business investment will in turn boost business travel. That measure is expected to pump $51 billion into the economy this year.

"Through the years, I've watched the impact of business investment on travel and feel business investment is a key element in driving business travel," he said.

After the Sept. 11 attacks, many businesses reduced travel and there was some thought they might rely more on video conferencing and the Internet to do business.

"I think it's too soon to predict if there has been a sea change in the way business travels," Marriott said. "I think a lot of corporations have said, 'Maybe we were traveling more than we should.' But once the economy turns around and competition heats up, there is a propensity on the part of businesses to want to get the last sale."

Marriott operates more than 2,400 hotels worldwide and had sales of $20 billion last year.

The company this year is forecasting a 2 percent to 3 percent decline in room revenues compared with last year. But that forecast is subject to change, Marriott said.

___

On the Net:

http://www.marriott.com

SA: SA to review arson laws


AAP General News (Australia)
12-31-2001
SA: SA to review arson laws

ADELAIDE, Dec 31 AAP - South Australia will urgently review its arson laws to toughen
penalties for firebugs, Premier Rob Kerin said today.

Mr Kerin said the move was made after the first two bushfires in the state this fire
season were deliberately lit.

"What has occurred in NSW over the past couple of weeks makes it even more crucial
to send a very strong message that anyone caught deliberately lighting a bushfire or wildfire
will face severe consequences," Mr Kerin said today in a statement.

"We are talking about an act of arson that can cause severe damage to property and
risk the lives of emergency service volunteers called in to fight these fires."

Mr Kerin said the review would assess current arson legislation and penalties in the
state and was expected to be completed by the end of next week.

AAP sl/ldj/de

KEYWORD: BUSHFIRES SA

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Fed: Favouring One Nation a bad move in NT, says Bartlett


AAP General News (Australia)
08-20-2001
Fed: Favouring One Nation a bad move in NT, says Bartlett

CANBERRA, Aug 20 AAP - The weekend's Northern Territory election result provided the
message to federal politicians that allocating preferences to One Nation was a negative
move, Australian Democrats Senator Andrew Bartlett said today.

The NT result, a dramatic shift to Labor that should give Labor government, was a clear
indication of Australia's mood for a change, he said.

"It's an interesting result given the nature of the Northern Territory electorate and
particularly given the assessment by the Country Liberal Party themselves, that preferencing
the One Nation may have damaged their vote," Senator Bartlett told reporters.

"That's a message parties need to take at the federal level as well because, whilst
we do need a change, we don't need a change to more destructive and negative policies."

Voters were looking for a change from the failed policies of major parties.

"The main sign I take from it is the public are looking for a change and in the federal
context that's even clearer," he said.

AAP dep/ph

KEYWORD: POLLNT BARTLETT

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

Qld; Woman critical after fall from Gold Coast unit balcony


AAP General News (Australia)
04-04-2001
Qld; Woman critical after fall from Gold Coast unit balcony

A 19-year-old woman is in a critical condition in the Gold Coast Hospital this morning
after a fall from the tenth floor of a unit block in Surfers Paradise.

The injured woman, who also suffered stab wounds, was discovered about 12.30am AEST
on the balcony of a second floor unit at Crown Towers in Ferny Avenue.

A police spokesman says the woman is believed to have climbed down two floors on the
outside of the building from the 12th floor to the tenth floor before falling to the second.

Police made the discovery after going to the unit complex to investigate the stabbing
of a 46-year-old man who suffered two small stab wounds to his shoulder.

He received stitches at the Gold Coast Hospital but the spokesman says he's not yet
been interviewed by police.

AAP RTV rad/alt

KEYWORD: FALL (BRISBANE)

2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.

WA: Hustings turn personal as wives, babies enter campaign


AAP General News (Australia)
01-12-2001
WA: Hustings turn personal as wives, babies enter campaign

The first full day of the West Australian election campaign has turned personal, with
both sides pitched for voters' hearts.

Premier RICHARD COURT yesterday unveiled what will possibly be his best asset in an
already-pedestrian campaign - his beaming wife JO - while Labor's boss GEOFF GALLOP went
close to kissing babies.

While Mr COURT was at Windows, the swankiest restaurant in town, announcing that all
eligible school leavers would be …